The need for AE emerged from the observation that securely combining a confidentiality mode with an authentication mode could be error prone and difficult.[1][2] This was confirmed by a number of practical attacks introduced into production protocols and applications by incorrect implementation, or lack of, authentication (including SSL/TLS).[3]

Interest in these modes was sparked by the publication of Charanjit Jutla's IACBC and IAPM modes[4] in 2000. Six different authenticated encryption modes (namely OCB 2.0, Key Wrap, CCM, EAX, Encrypt-then-MAC (EtM), and GCM) have been standardized in ISO/IEC 19772:2009.[5] More were developed in response to NIST solicitation.[6]Sponge functions can be used in duplex mode to provide authenticated encryption.[7]

Output: plaintext, or an error if the authentication tag does not match the supplied ciphertext or header.

The header part is intended to provide authenticity and integrity protection for networking or storage metadata for which confidentiality is unnecessary, but authenticity is desired.

In addition to protecting message integrity and confidentiality, authenticated encryption can provide plaintext awareness and security against chosen ciphertext attack. In these attacks, an adversary attempts to gain an advantage against a cryptosystem (e.g., information about the secret decryption key) by submitting carefully chosen ciphertexts to some "decryption oracle" and analyzing the decrypted results. Authenticated encryption schemes can recognize improperly-constructed ciphertexts and refuse to decrypt them. This in turn prevents the attacker from requesting the decryption of any ciphertext unless he generated it correctly using the encryption algorithm, which would imply that he already knows the plaintext. Implemented correctly, this removes the usefulness of the decryption oracle, by preventing an attacker from gaining useful information that he does not already possess.

Many specialized authenticated encryption modes have been developed for use with symmetric block ciphers. However, authenticated encryption can be generically constructed by combining an encryption scheme and a Message Authentication Code (MAC), provided that:

Bellare and Namprempre (2000) analyzed three compositions of these primitives, and demonstrated that encrypting a message and subsequently applying a MAC to the ciphertext implies security against an adaptive chosen ciphertext attack, provided that both functions meet the required properties.

In 2013, a competition was announced to encourage design of authenticated encryption modes.[8]

Encrypt-then-MAC (EtM): The plaintext is first encrypted, then a MAC is produced based on the resulting ciphertext. The ciphertext and its MAC are sent together. The standard method according to ISO/IEC 19772:2009.[5] This is the only method which can reach the highest definition of security in AE, but this can only be achieved when the MAC used is "Strongly Unforgeable"[9] In November 2014, TLS and DTLS extension for EtM has been published as RFC 7366.

Encrypt-and-MAC (E&M): A MAC is produced based on the plaintext, and the plaintext is encrypted without the MAC. The plaintext's MAC and the ciphertext are sent together. Used in, e.g., SSH. Even though the E&M approach has not been proved to be strongly unforgeable in itself,[9] it is possible to apply some minor modifications to SSH to make it strongly unforgeable despite the approach.

MAC-then-Encrypt (MtE): A MAC is produced based on the plaintext, then the plaintext and MAC are together encrypted to produce a ciphertext based on both. The ciphertext (containing an encrypted MAC) is sent. Used in, e.g., SSL/TLS. Even though the MtE approach has not been proven to be strongly unforgeable in itself,[9] the SSL/TLS implementation has been proved to be strongly unforgeable by Krawczyk who showed that SSL/TLS was in fact secure because of the encoding used alongside the MtE mechanism.[10]